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Nicht fuktionierende Cron jobs fixen
run-parts man page auszug: If neither the --lsbsysinit option nor the --regex option is given then the names must consist entirely of ASCII upper- and lower-case letters, ASCII digits, ASCII underscores, and ASCII minus-hyphens.
- Missing newlines
- Bad permissions
Job alle 5 Minuten starten
*/5 * * * * * root /path/to/script
man 5 crontab
CRONTAB(5) CRONTAB(5) NAME crontab - tables for driving cron DESCRIPTION A crontab file contains instructions to the cron(8) daemon of the gen‐ eral form: ‘‘run this command at this time on this date’’. Each user has their own crontab, and commands in any given crontab will be exe‐ cuted as the user who owns the crontab. Uucp and News will usually have their own crontabs, eliminating the need for explicitly running su(1) as part of a cron command. Blank lines and leading spaces and tabs are ignored. Lines whose first non-space character is a hash-sign (#) are comments, and are ignored. Note that comments are not allowed on the same line as cron commands, since they will be taken to be part of the command. Similarly, com‐ ments are not allowed on the same line as environment variable set‐ tings. An active line in a crontab will be either an environment setting or a cron command. An environment setting is of the form, name = value where the spaces around the equal-sign (=) are optional, and any subse‐ quent non-leading spaces in value will be part of the value assigned to name. The value string may be placed in quotes (single or double, but matching) to preserve leading or trailing blanks. The value string is not parsed for environmental substitutions, thus lines like PATH = $HOME/bin:$PATH will not work as you might expect. Several environment variables are set up automatically by the cron(8) daemon. SHELL is set to /bin/sh, and LOGNAME and HOME are set from the /etc/passwd line of the crontab’s owner. PATH is set to "/usr/bin:/bin". HOME, SHELL, and PATH may be overridden by settings in the crontab; LOGNAME is the user that the job is running from, and may not be changed. (Another note: the LOGNAME variable is sometimes called USER on BSD systems... on these systems, USER will be set also.) In addition to LOGNAME, HOME, and SHELL, cron(8) will look at MAILTO if it has any reason to send mail as a result of running commands in ‘‘this’’ crontab. If MAILTO is defined (and non-empty), mail is sent to the user so named. MAILTO may also be used to direct mail to multi‐ ple recipients by seperating recipient users with a comma. If MAILTO is defined but empty (MAILTO=""), no mail will be sent. Otherwise mail is sent to the owner of the crontab. On the Debian GNU/Linux system, cron supports the pam_env module, and loads the environment specified by /etc/security/pam_env.conf. How‐ ever, the PAM setting do NOT override the settings described above nor any settings in the crontab file itself. Note in particular that if you want a PATH other than "/usr/bin:/bin", you will need to set it in the crontab file. By default, cron will send mail using the mail "Content-Type:" header of "text/plain" with the "charset=" parameter set to the charmap / codeset of the locale in which crond(8) is started up - ie. either the default system locale, if no LC_* environment variables are set, or the locale specified by the LC_* environment variables ( see locale(7)). You can use different character encodings for mailed cron job output by setting the CONTENT_TYPE and CONTENT_TRANSFER_ENCODING variables in crontabs, to the correct values of the mail headers of those names The format of a cron command is very much the V7 standard, with a num‐ ber of upward-compatible extensions. Each line has five time and date fields, followed by a command, followed by a newline character (’\n’). The system crontab (/etc/crontab) uses the same format, except that the username for the command is specified after the time and date fields and before the command. The fields may be separated by spaces or tabs. Commands are executed by cron(8) when the minute, hour, and month of year fields match the current time, and when at least one of the two day fields (day of month, or day of week) match the current time (see ‘‘Note’’ below). cron(8) examines cron entries once every minute. The time and date fields are: field allowed values ----- -------------- minute 0-59 hour 0-23 day of month 1-31 month 1-12 (or names, see below) day of week 0-7 (0 or 7 is Sun, or use names) A field may be an asterisk (*), which always stands for ‘‘first-last’’. Ranges of numbers are allowed. Ranges are two numbers separated with a hyphen. The specified range is inclusive. For example, 8-11 for an ‘‘hours’’ entry specifies execution at hours 8, 9, 10 and 11. Lists are allowed. A list is a set of numbers (or ranges) separated by commas. Examples: ‘‘1,2,5,9’’, ‘‘0-4,8-12’’. Step values can be used in conjunction with ranges. Following a range with ‘‘/<number>’’ specifies skips of the number’s value through the range. For example, ‘‘0-23/2’’ can be used in the hours field to spec‐ ify command execution every other hour (the alternative in the V7 stan‐ dard is ‘‘0,2,4,6,8,10,12,14,16,18,20,22’’). Steps are also permitted after an asterisk, so if you want to say ‘‘every two hours’’, just use ‘‘*/2’’. Names can also be used for the ‘‘month’’ and ‘‘day of week’’ fields. Use the first three letters of the particular day or month (case doesn’t matter). Ranges or lists of names are not allowed. The ‘‘sixth’’ field (the rest of the line) specifies the command to be run. The entire command portion of the line, up to a newline or % character, will be executed by /bin/sh or by the shell specified in the SHELL variable of the crontab file. Percent-signs (%) in the command, unless escaped with backslash (\), will be changed into newline charac‐ ters, and all data after the first % will be sent to the command as standard input. There is no way to split a single command line onto multiple lines, like the shell’s trailing "\". Note: The day of a command’s execution can be specified by two fields — day of month, and day of week. If both fields are restricted (i.e., aren’t *), the command will be run when either field matches the cur‐ rent time. For example, ‘‘30 4 1,15 * 5’’ would cause a command to be run at 4:30 am on the 1st and 15th of each month, plus every Friday. Instead of the first five fields, one of eight special strings may appear: string meaning ------ ------- @reboot Run once, at startup. @yearly Run once a year, "0 0 1 1 *". @annually (same as @yearly) @monthly Run once a month, "0 0 1 * *". @weekly Run once a week, "0 0 * * 0". @daily Run once a day, "0 0 * * *". @midnight (same as @daily) @hourly Run once an hour, "0 * * * *". EXAMPLE CRON FILE # use /bin/bash to run commands, instead of the default /bin/sh SHELL=/bin/bash # mail any output to ‘paul’, no matter whose crontab this is MAILTO=paul # # run five minutes after midnight, every day 5 0 * * * $HOME/bin/daily.job >> $HOME/tmp/out 2>&1 # run at 2:15pm on the first of every month -- output mailed to paul 15 14 1 * * $HOME/bin/monthly # run at 10 pm on weekdays, annoy Joe 0 22 * * 1-5 mail -s "It’s 10pm" joe%Joe,%%Where are your kids?% 23 0-23/2 * * * echo "run 23 minutes after midn, 2am, 4am ..., everyday" 5 4 * * sun echo "run at 5 after 4 every sunday" EXAMPLE SYSTEM CRON FILE This has the username field, as used by /etc/crontab. # /etc/crontab: system-wide crontab # Unlike any other crontab you don’t have to run the ‘crontab’ # command to install the new version when you edit this file # and files in /etc/cron.d. These files also have username fields, # that none of other the crontabs do. SHELL=/bin/sh PATH=/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin # m h dom mon dow user command 42 6 * * * root run-parts --report /etc/cron.daily 47 6 * * 7 root run-parts --report /etc/cron.weekly 52 6 1 * * root run-parts --report /etc/cron.monthly # # Removed invocation of anacron, as this is now handled by a # /etc/cron.d file SEE ALSO cron(8), crontab(1) EXTENSIONS When specifying day of week, both day 0 and day 7 will be considered Sunday. BSD and ATT seem to disagree about this. Lists and ranges are allowed to co-exist in the same field. "1-3,7-9" would be rejected by ATT or BSD cron -- they want to see "1-3" or "7,8,9" ONLY. Ranges can include "steps", so "1-9/2" is the same as "1,3,5,7,9". Months or days of the week can be specified by name. Environment variables can be set in the crontab. In BSD or ATT, the environment handed to child processes is basically the one from /etc/rc. Command output is mailed to the crontab owner (BSD can’t do this), can be mailed to a person other than the crontab owner (SysV can’t do this), or the feature can be turned off and no mail will be sent at all (SysV can’t do this either). All of the ‘@’ commands that can appear in place of the first five fields are extensions. AUTHOR Paul Vixie <paul@vix.com> 4th Berkeley Distribution 24 January 1994 CRONTAB(5)
man 8 cron
CRON(8) CRON(8) NAME cron - daemon to execute scheduled commands (Vixie Cron) SYNOPSIS cron [-f] [-l] [-L loglevel] DESCRIPTION cron is started automatically from /etc/init.d on entering multi-user runlevels. OPTIONS -f Stay in foreground mode, don’t daemonize. -l Enable LSB compliant names for /etc/cron.d files -L loglevel Sets the loglevel for cron. The standard logging level (1) will log the start of all the cron jobs. A higher loglevel (2) will cause cron to log also the end of all cronjobs, which can be useful to audit the behaviour of tasks run by cron. Logging will be disabled if the loglevel is set to zero (0). NOTES cron searches its spool area (/var/spool/cron/crontabs) for crontab files (which are named after accounts in /etc/passwd); crontabs found are loaded into memory. Note that crontabs in this directory should not be accessed directly - the crontab command should be used to access and update them. cron also reads /etc/crontab, which is in a slightly different format (see crontab(5)). Additionally, cron reads the files in /etc/cron.d: it treats the files in /etc/cron.d as in the same way as the /etc/crontab file (they follow the special format of that file, i.e. they include the user field). However, they are independent of /etc/crontab: they do not, for example, inherit environment variable settings from it. The intended purpose of this feature is to allow packages that require finer control of their scheduling than the /etc/cron.{daily,weekly,monthly} directories to add a crontab file to /etc/cron.d. Such files should be named after the package that supplies them. Files must conform to the same naming convention as used by run- parts(8): they must consist solely of upper- and lower-case letters, digits, underscores, and hyphens. If the -l option is specified, then they must conform to the LSB namespace specification, exactly as in the --lsbsysinit option in run-parts. Like /etc/crontab, the files in the /etc/cron.d directory are monitored for changes. In general, the admin should not use /etc/cron.d/, but use the standard system crontab /etc/crontab. cron then wakes up every minute, examining all stored crontabs, check‐ ing each command to see if it should be run in the current minute. When executing commands, any output is mailed to the owner of the crontab (or to the user named in the MAILTO environment variable in the crontab, if such exists). The children copies of cron running these processes have their name coerced to uppercase, as will be seen in the syslog and ps output. Additionally, cron checks each minute to see if its spool directory’s modtime (or the modtime on /etc/crontab) has changed, and if it has, cron will then examine the modtime on all crontabs and reload those which have changed. Thus cron need not be restarted whenever a crontab file is modified. Note that the crontab(1) command updates the modtime of the spool directory whenever it changes a crontab. Special considerations exist when the clock is changed by less than 3 hours, for example at the beginning and end of daylight savings time. If the time has moved forwards, those jobs which would have run in the time that was skipped will be run soon after the change. Conversely, if the time has moved backwards by less than 3 hours, those jobs that fall into the repeated time will not be re-run. Only jobs that run at a particular time (not specified as @hourly, nor with ’*’ in the hour or minute specifier) are affected. Jobs which are specified with wildcards are run based on the new time immediately. Clock changes of more than 3 hours are considered to be corrections to the clock, and the new time is used immediately. cron logs its action to the syslog facility ’cron’, and logging may be controlled using the standard syslogd(8) facility. SEE ALSO crontab(1), crontab(5) AUTHOR Paul Vixie <paul@vix.com> 4th Berkeley Distribution 31 October 2006 CRON(8)